Abstract

Fire is considered a major threat to forest conservation in the Neotropics. Palaeoecological studies are critical for understanding the long-term interactions of climate, fire, and human activities in the savanna–forest dynamic. Here, new data from palynological analyses conducted in sedimentary records from the northern edge of the Amazon Basin, the Gran Sabana, southeast of Canaima National Park (CNP) are presented. Four radiocarbon ages from Quebrada Kowana (QK) and two for Ariwe Fernland (AF) records showed that both are late-Holocene age (with extrapolated basal ages of 3100 and 3400 cal. yr BP, respectively). Both showed the occurrence of gallery forest until 1800 (QK) and 1600 (AF) cal. yr BP, with forest taxa reaching 60% and 40% of the terrestrial pollen sum, respectively. The main forest taxa were Celastraceae, Moraceae/Urticaceae, Schefflera, Protium, and Mahurea (QK) and Dimorphandra, Protium, Schefflera, Tachigali, and Blepharandra (AF). Savanna herbs (mainly Poaceae) reached 40–50% (QK) and 60% (AF). The high abundance of savanna herbs together with the low occurrence of mature forest taxa, and high abundance of pioneer taxa, suggests that the former forests comprised very open and disturbed forest-belts, surrounded by savannas. Since 1800 (QK) and 1600 (AF) cal. yr BP, forest taxa dropped to 10% and 5%, respectively, suggesting the substitution of forests by herbaceous communities. The high abundance of charcoal recorded from the beginning of the records to about 1800–1600 cal. yr BP suggests that recurrent fires spreading from neighboring savannas were reaching the former forest, causing compositional changes and triggering forest reduction. Fires were very likely human-made, but highly controlled by climate. Hence, forest substitution happened when a combination of local fires and droughts was given in every record. Results agree with those from other localities in the CNP in confirming the occurrence of regional-scale gallery forest degradation during the late Holocene.

Highlights

  • In the upland savannas of Guayana, Canaima National Park (CNP), fire is considered a major threat to forests and biodiversity integrity

  • Given the precision associated with calibrated radiocarbon ages and the depth/age interpolations, this is considered broadly simultaneous at both sites

  • The former gallery forests evidenced at the beginning of both records are palynologically analogous to structurally simple and low-diversity modern forests (Figure 6), indicating that ancient forests in Quebrada Kowana (QK) and Ariwe Fernland (AF) were probably already highly disturbed when the sedimentary record began

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Summary

Introduction

In the upland savannas of Guayana, Canaima National Park (CNP), fire is considered a major threat to forests and biodiversity integrity. Conservation of this region is of importance given the many environmental services provided by these ecosystems and their high biological diversity. This was recognized when UNESCO listed the CNP as a World Heritage area in 1994. The region is considered a pilot area to test ecological models in the Neotropics, in the context of global environmental change (Rull et al, 2012, 2015)

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